A panoramic radiograph showed two implants at the vicinity of the lesion with no other significant findings. An excisional biopsy of the lesion followed by histopathologic examination of the biopsy specimen revealed salient and distinctive features of peripheral giant cell granuloma and of peripheral ...
intraoral periapical radiographperipheral giant cell granulomaPeripheral giant cell granuloma (PGCG) is a benign inflammatory hyperplasic, exophytic lesion of unknown etiology. It develops on the gingiva and alveolar ridge. It could represent a local reaction to trauma or irritation. Management requires ...
canine .Occlusal radiograph shows buccal displacement with respect to lower canine (Figure 2 and fig 2.a)A clinical differential diagnosis of Fibroma ,Peripheral ossifying fibroma and Peripheral giant cell granuloma was considered and the decision was made to excise the lesion under local anaesthesia....
Peripheral giant cell granuloma (PGCG) is the most common oral giant cell lesion. It appears as an extraosseous soft tissue nodule that originates from the connective tissue of the periosteum or the periodontal ligament membrane, and is localized within the soft tissues [1,2,3,4]. This path...
The peripheral giant cell granuloma (PGCG) is a further reactive lesion in differential diagnosis; it is related to trauma or local irritation and it occurs mostly on the attached gingiva, on the alveolar mucosa, or on the crest of edentulous alveolar ridge. It appears as an exophytic mass, ...
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) latency patterns are well defined in EBV-associated epithelial, NK/T-cell, and B-cell malignancies, with links between latency stage and tumorigenesis deciphered in various studies. In vitro studies suggest that the oncogenic act